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What's New in Science | Cosmic Surprises, Newton Supreme, A New Collider, and Feynman Dines Out?

6/9/20261 hr 12 min

I think this was one of my most enjoyable dialogues in our What’s new series. Maybe Sabine and I are getting more used to each other’s cadence and interests or maybe it was the subject matter. Either way, I think you will find this to be a fascinating and provocative discussion of science at the forefront, and at the not-so-forefront, because that science is interesting too!

We began our discussion describing a new finding of a Giant Ring of galaxies billions of light years across in the sky. The key questions are: Is it real? And is it surprising? We both have slightly different takes on this.

Next we described a new measurement of the strength of gravity on scales from 80 to 800 million light years in distance. And guess what? Gravity falls off just like Newton predicted! This may seem like a big yawn, but one of the most popular models that claims to do away with dark matter would imply that Gravity would fall off differently on these scales. Does this new result kill that idea? Stay tuned.

Microsoft, which has cried wolf a number of times so far when it comes to something called Majorana qubits as the basis of a new viable quantum computer just published a new paper claiming they finally have it. Sabine and I discuss why we are both still skeptical, but why the effort is worth it.

Next, CERN, the large European particle physics laboratory, and the world particle physics community seem to have converged on plans for building a huge new accelerator in the current CERN site.. this time involving an underground ring 91 km in circumference, in which electrons and positrons would collide to explore the detailed properties of the Higgs particle. Is the effort worth it? Again, Sabine and I have slightly different takes on this.

Fusion power, which we have talked about in a number of earlier episodes, continues to tempt humanity with the promise of unlimited energy. Many people, myself included, have tended to argue that fusion seems to be 25 years in the future, and may always be 25 years in the future. But many new efforts are underway, so who knows. Unfortunately, a group of economists has analyzed fusion in the context of other large energy programs and have argued that even if we can achieve it, it may not be as economically viable as many claim.

Finally, one day Richard Feynman went to a Thai restaurant with his young companion Ralph Leighton, and wondered what he should order. Should it be the same old dish he loved or something new. An equation filled napkin later, and he had the answer. Fifty years later some cognitive scientists resurrected Feynman’s napkin and explained it, and argued it might have important implications in other social situations. Such is the power of science.

As always, an ad-free video version of this podcast is also available to paid Critical Mass subscribers. Your subscriptions support the non-profit Origins Project Foundation, which produces the podcast. The audio version is available free on the Critical Mass site and on all podcast sites, and the video version will also be available on the Origins Project YouTube.

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First 90 seconds
  1. Lawrence M. Krauss· Host0:00

    [gentle music] Hi, and welcome to The Origins Podcast. Once again, one of my favorite segments with my colleague Sabine Hossenfelder, where we dissect claims in science, wonderful new discoveries, and other things that are claimed to be discoveries, and try and tell the difference between the two. And my astute colleague has an eye for nonsense, and so, uh, we like to look at all of that. And we like to look at things from the farthest reaches of the universe to things under our very nose here. Well, first, welcome Sabine. It's nice to see you.

  2. Sabine Hossenfelder· Host0:42

    [laughs] Good to see you, and welcome back everybody else.

  3. Lawrence M. Krauss· Host0:46

    Y- thank you. Yes. Now, I wanna start with, um, with something that you, uh, brought up. A j- new giant ring in the sky. Tell me about it, because I wanna understand why I should care.

  4. Sabine Hossenfelder· Host0:56

    [laughs] Yeah, so this is a story I've been following, like, for a, for a very long time. Um, so there's this, um, [laughs] string of discoveries in astrophysics and cosmology of things that shouldn't exist. Uh, you know, there's galaxies that are too big, or black holes that were formed too early, or, you know, galaxies that don't rotate, or they, you know, they have too much structure. Or, um, giant structures in the universe which are too large to exist, and this example falls into this

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